Fact Checker Unit (www.ifilm.com)Much though Cybercinema would love to be outside, kicking through the crisp autumn leaves and mistaking dog turds for conkers, she's been busy compiling a seasonal web playlist, which is appropriately full of mellow fruitfulness. They don't come any mellower than Bill Murray, deadpan comic genius and golf-cart getaway merchant, who apparently drinks, yes, warm milk, before bedtime. Or does he? To find out, New York comedy duo Pete and Brian unleash their ass-kicking alter-egos, Dictum Magazine's intrepid fact-checkers Dylan and Russell. No question is off-limits ("Do you have proof that your genitals look like the Virgin Mary?"), no assignment too tough for this Wikipedia-scorning pair. So there's nothing for it but to break into Murray's loft apartment and find out if he's lactose (and lunkhead) tolerant. Nine minutes of CSI-spoofing juvenile joy, filled with milky goodness.

Do Armed Robbers Have Affairs? (www.bbc.co.uk/filmnetwork)It's not just Northern Rock customers who sit patiently outside banks, in the pale light of dawn. In this disarmingly melancholy, yet gripping Northern Ireland heist drama, seasoned armed-robbers Mimms and Price mull over fallen friends, late-blooming love, and last chances while they wait to get their hands on their ill-gotten gains. Director Brian Kirk opens up this two-hander wonderfully, weaving in flashback plots that leave the drama sticky with fear and regret. Sean McGinley and Sorcha Cusack give particularly fine, fond performances, as the middle-aged lovers torn between desire and despair.Quetzalcoatl (www.atomfilms.com)We plough the fields and scatter this year, but with a difference. Replete with sprinkled bones and blood, and rendered in fiery pre-Columbian images, Nick Kozis's opulent animation of the Aztec myth of creation and crops will put some Mexican spice into your harvest festival. As plumed serpent god Quetzalcoatl coaxes corn for man from the jealous rain deity Tlaloc, Kozis's vivid, fluid 2D animation shapeshifts from charnel house to anthill, like a stone temple relief come to life. Opt for the Atom "big screen" option (it's free, people), and bask in Kozis's sizzling colour palate and seamless narrative skill.The Burg: Episode One - Cred"Do you guys want to see a dead body?" There are ups and downs to being a cool urban twentysomething in Brooklyn's rapidly gentrifying Williamsburg. In this sweet and sharp indie web series, hipsters Jed and Xander face some terrible dilemmas: What will evicting Early the Buddhist slacker do to their karma? Should their new flatmate be Ryan the preppy Wall Street broker, or Stanislav, the Russian meth dealer? And will Courtney the flakey actor ever find an audition T shirt that makes her look hot yet politically aware, all at once? Nicely ironic and nichey, this could be Friends for the MySpace generation. Except that MySpace is so, like, last year.Recall (www.atomfilms.com)Stop licking the lead paint off that cheaply-imported toy, and pay attention. Or you'll miss out on Michael Noonan's hilariously brash and blackly comic farce, in which a panicky product recall alert sends Graeme, of Graeme's Electrical Goods, haring across the Australian outback to save customer Martha Trollop from a potentially fatal product. Not so much a who-dunnit as a what's gonna do it, as Martha juggles hairdryer, microwave, blender and electric carving knife, any one of which could be the mysterious death-dealing item Omega GT 238. Be sure and wait for the very last shot, since this energetic little movie has more twists than a Curly Wurly.Girltrash!Obeying Godard's maxim that "cinema is a girl and a gun", this punchy, high-octane web series has lashings of both, as it romps through LA's lesbian gangster underworld in the wake of comely robbers Daisy and Tyler, who can't keep their hands off other people's wives, or other people's money, but keep falling for skanky Southern belle LouAnne's "horizontal hustles". Director/writer Angela Robinson (The 'L' Word) slices and dices her plots at lightning speed - this may be the only crime drama whose episodes regularly clock in at just over a minute. A trashy, splashy, delight of a show that lives down to its motto: "So wrong, it's right".